Teamsters Local 89 HELPFUL TEAMSTER TIPS FOR UPS GROUND TEAMSTERS

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Teamsters Local 89 HELPFUL TEAMSTER TIPS FOR UPS GROUND TEAMSTERS

HELPFUL TEAMSTER TIPS FOR UPS GROUND TEAMSTERS (Revised July 2014) As a UPS employee there are some things you need to know if you plan on working for UPS until you retire. You will also need the same information if you are only working for the health insurance or if you are just there for a short ride. This Guide is just as important to those who depend on you to have a healthy and satisfying career at UPS. Listed below are some survival points and facts and in no particular order: UPS is big, diversified, powerful, influential, trend setting, tough, demanding, and wealthy. They can be unforgiving, forgiving, tyrants, benevolent, ridiculous task masters and logical. The Company s lifelong antagonist is the Teamsters Union. UPS needs the Teamsters Union to make them an exemplary and safe employer. Teamsters at UPS decided long ago that having a Union allows them to have a voice in their workplace and have the ability to negotiate their fair share of UPS s success. The Teamsters need UPS because they provide many good jobs for many Teamsters. Therefore, as a UPS Teamster member you need to know how to balance those two entities in your best interests as a worker, family provider and Union member. Again, in no particular order, are listed some of the things you need to know in order to be on a level playing field: UPS is where you have chosen or otherwise decided to report to work every day. Therefore, UPS owes you every bit as much as you owe them. You are entitled to A fair day's pay with benefits. In return, they are entitled to a fair day's work. Being entitled to a fair day's pay implies not only to wages and benefits but also to conditions, respect, consideration, and a work environment that will make it possible for you to get to the end of your day and to the end of your work life safely and in good health. A fair day's pay is not a gift to you from UPS; it is a hard-fought for, Union negotiated benefit that UPS would just as soon not have to give to you or have to Live up to, and that s just good business on their part. It is so true that you don t Get in life what you deserve, you get what you negotiate.

Read your contract and know it! Know your steward and update him on any issues you may have. You should make it a point to have his/her phone number. Our stewards work hard to uphold your rights so you should thank them from time to time. The disputes between Teamsters Local 89 and UPS are settled thru a grievance procedure. A grievance is a formalized complaint that your union steward will asset you with if the complaint cannot be resolved thru discussion. Once a grievance is filed you will have a local hearing at your worksite to seek a resolution. If a resolution is not met then your grievance will proceed to Kentucky State Panel Grievance Committee The Panel. That committee is the single most influential entity in your UPS career. That is the group that can hold the fate of you and your family in their hands. If no decision is reached at this level, your grievance can be moved forward to a J.A.C. Panel & then on to the National Panel. The Company would like to control that Panel. The Union would like to control the Panel. The Panel is made equally by union representatives and company representatives to hear the facts of the grievance and render a decision. The Teamsters Union is not some self-contained, remote organization that you can criticize without criticizing yourself, because, you are the Teamsters Union. Criticizing the Union and not working within to help create change is wrong. We should all be working toward a strong union. If the Shop Steward does not do his or her job effectively or as well as you could, you should agree to help the steward, show them what you think should be done or become a steward yourself and do something worthwhile for yourself and the Union. Stop working your lunch and breaks, your body needs rest and refreshment. Compare the amount of money you give the Company by working your breaks with every other expenditure you have in your budget; next, try justifying what you are doing to yourself and your family. If your workload is beyond your ability to complete without working your breaks, make a determination as to why; then tell your supervisor to correct the problem. If they do not correct the problem, call the Union and tell them what needs to be done. The goal here is to establish a workload that allows you to include your lunch and breaks.

Don't work injured! Report all work related injuries; follow your doctor's advice; fight like hell against any orders or demands on you to work outside of your medical restrictions. Have a doctor of your own; the Company s doctor is just that, the Company s. Don't think that you are tough and can take it; you are no tougher then some really tough guys who have seen their lives and their families futures destroyed by being afraid to report work related injuries. Don't report work-related injuries as non-work related. Make UPS pay their own bills Don t report non-work related injuries as work related. If you have a drug or alcohol problem, get help. UPS will support you if go to them before you punch in or before you have done something that can result in discipline. Also, your health and welfare program and your Local Union will assist. If you know someone at work who has a drug or alcohol problem show them the paragraph above. Tardiness is an attendance problem just like absenteeism. This is the one problem you can t blame on the Company; only you write this record. Get two alarm clocks. Put one next to the bed and the other across the room so that you have to get out of bed to turn it off. Call and let management know if you er going to be late as a courtesy. Do not let the Union put you off. Sometimes there is so much work for them the Union must prioritize its work. If you do not agree with their priority, make it known to your business agent. Always make your differences known to the Union, not to the Company or to outsiders whose interests are not the same as yours. Keep records: every member should have a notebook into which you should make an entry each day, everyday without failure. Include what happened that day and why, including what your supervisor said and what your response was. When nothing happens, say so. The hardest thing for the Union to do when defending a member against charges made against them is to defend a member who cannot explain the what, why, where and when of the day or event in question. It is almost impossible for members to recreate events from memory. Always document off the clock!

Do not sign papers and documents if you do not agree with the contents or believe them to be false. Do not sign papers without receiving a copy. When in doubt, call the Union for advice. You do not have to sign anything unless it is required by the government or your paycheck. You would be surprised how many papers you have already signed, either when applying for work or at one of the many PCMs you have attended. Never go into a meeting with the Company without a shop steward concerning any matter of discipline or any issue that makes you uncomfortable. Always do what you are ordered to do as long as what you are ordered to do is not dishonest, immoral or unsafe. Never do any of the latter, even under threat of discharge. If ordered to do something you should not do, involve the Union. Always perform your assigned work as though someone is watching, because, someone is watching. No, you are not paranoid, someone really is watching. Always go to the Union's General Membership meetings. Take your fellow Teamsters. There really is strength in numbers. If you have a question about the Union, ask the shop steward or someone at the Union hall; Do not ask the Company about Union matters; you will get a biased response. If you have a question about the Company, ask the Company first. If you do not get an answer, ask the Union. Never lie, UPS can and will fire you for dishonesty. Never lie at a discipline hearing; it is very hard to defend a lie. Have a shop steward or business agent with you and don't answer questions of which your Union reps do not know what your answer is going to be. If they don't know the answer, take a break. Don't falsify your records for any reason. If told to do so by a supervisor, record what they told you in your notebook then tell the Center Manger and the Union. Falsification of records is difficult to defend and supervisors will never admit they told you to do so. This is particularly true of recording others work as your own or false lunch and break times. Don't take what is not yours, nothing, not even a pen or piece of paper. Over-goods and damaged packages belong to receivers, shippers and UPS, most anyone but you. That also goes for damaged packages that are thrown into the dumpster. Never, ever, leave a COD without having received payment. Many drivers have been left holding the bag. Also, you will lose the argument and much, much more.

Never, ever, sign a customer s name for them even if they are a friend; you could find you have no friend and possibly be terminated. Never ever open a package or put your hand into one unless you are a rewrap person or otherwise authorized to do so. Even though your supervisor may know when you really do take your breaks outside the allotted times, he or she may never formally admit that to their boss. In a pinch, you will have only the Union to defend you against charges of stealing time. Keep your cool; almost every serious customer complaint results from a driver being tired and angry and responding to an unreasonable shipper or receiver. Upon returning to the building, file your own "customer complaint." Stay out of customer's houses, even when invited in. Customers have been known to lie about what took place in their houses. Drivers should never flirt or make passes at customers or their employees; every sexual harassment complaint results in the driver being in shock because he was certain that the one complaining was receptive to his advances or was leading him on. Really!!! Always report accidents no matter how slight. Even if you have an accident out in the woods, never assume that no one saw it; you can bet someone did. Having an accident that you know occurred doesn t mean that you can be fired but not reporting it does. Accidents are defendable; not reporting them is not. Do not let anyone convince you to drive a vehicle that has a safety defect. Again, make a fuss; involve the Union. Work to make a living not an impression! At UPS, you have off weekends, holidays and vacations; that's a good deal. The attitude should be that you are going to work for the week, looking forward to payday and the weekend. Make as much money as you can while you are still able to make as much as you can. You may not agree with that advice now, but you will be telling your adult children to do the same thing when they go to work. You never know what tragedy may occur in your life. Invest the maximum in the 401K. It will only hurt for a few months and after that you will not even notice the difference. (Thank me 20 years from now for that advice.)

Take care of your Union; even if you think you are one who can pull yourself up by your own bootstraps; the boot straps that you pull on are those supports that have been fashioned by Union workers before you: Those old retirees! Take care of your health; no one else is going to do that for you and this is the one time you really can pull yourself up by your own bootstraps. Support fellow workers who need your help, whether you like them or not. You are not going to get out of this life alive or retire from UPS without some sort of tragedy in your life; always carry some dollar bills, one for every panhandler that may ask you for money. In reality, we really don't know why we are blessed and they are not. And last, but not least, remember that no one is as responsible for you as you are. This is not your contract but helpful advice to help you survive at UPS. Remember to please read and follow your contract. Call me if you think I have left anything out that you know can be helpful to others. In Solidarity, James DeWeese Teamsters Local 89 (502) 614-8628